Charlie Reese, Jr. never received the raise he claims was due to him after he had worked six months for Ice Cream Specialties, Inc. (ICS). Reese says ICS did not award him the higher pay rate because he is African-American, and he sued for discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
The district court granted summary judgment to ICS, holding that Reese’s claim was untimely because he waited until years after he was denied the raise to file a charge of discrimination with the Equal Employment Op
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portunity Commission (EEOC). Reese contends that his claim was timely under the continuing violation theory because each week’s paycheck was a fresh discriminatory act. We conclude that the rule of
Bazemore v. Friday,
I
Because summary judgment was granted against Reese, we present the following account of the facts in the light most favorable to him. Reese began working for ICS in August 1996; his initial pay rate was $7.85 per hour. When ICS hired Reese, it promised to raise his hourly wage by 45c in February 1997, his six-month anniversary. ICS did not do so for Reese, however, even though it did award a six-month raise to its white male employees.
Reese did not realize that his six-month raise had never been awarded until August 2000, some three-and-a-half years later. At that time, prompted by an unrelated state investigation into allegations of discrimination at ICS, Reese requested a copy of his payroll records and noticed that ICS had never paid him the raise. After discovering that he had not received the raise, Reese filed a charge of race discrimination with the EEOC in November 2000. Later that month the EEOC dismissed his charge as untimely.
Reese then sued ICS
pro se.
ICS mоved for summary judgment on the basis that Reese had not filed his charge with the EEOC within 300 days of the alleged violation. See
Minor v. Ivy Tech State College,
Reese appealed. This court appointed counsel to represent Reese, and directed counsel to address the relevance to Reese’s claim of the Supreme Court’s application of the continuing violation theory in Baze-more, supra, which held that each discriminatory paycheck an employee received constitutes a separate violation of Title VII.
II
The fate of Reese’s claim turns on the proper characterization of the wrong or wrongs he has suffered. Three possibilities exist. First, ICS’s refusal to award him the raise might have been a single discriminatory act that took place in February 1997. Second, the course of events that led to a long series of paychecks that were lower than they should have been might be the type of unlawful employment practice that cannot be said to occur on any particular day, but instead depends on the cumulative effect of individual acts— that is, it might have given rise to a continuing violation. See
National Railroad Passenger Corp.,
Because it represents the Supreme Court’s most recent word on this subject, we begin our analysis with a look at
National Railroad Passenger Corp.
In that case, the respondent Morgan had sued the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (known everywhere as Amtrak) raising claims of both discrete discriminatory and retaliatory acts and of a racially hostile work environment. The Court took the case to consider “whether, and under what circumstances, a Title VII plaintiff may file suit on events that fall outside [the 180 or 300-day] statutory time period.”
We have repeatedly interpreted the term “practice” to apply to a discrete act or single “occurrence,” even when it has a connection to other acts. For example, in Electrical Workers v. Robbins & Myers, Inc.,429 U.S. 229 , 234,97 S.Ct. 441 ,50 L.Ed.2d 427 (1976), an employee asserted that his complaint was timely filed because the datе “the alleged unlawful employment practice occurred” was the date after the conclusion of a grievance arbitration procedure, rather than the earlier date of his discharge. The discharge, he contended, was “tentative” and “nonfinal” until the grievance and arbitration procedure ended. Not so, the Court concluded, because the discriminatory act occurred on the date of the discharge — the date that the parties understood the termination to be final. Id., at 234-235,97 S.Ct. 441 . Similarly, in Bazemore v. Friday,478 U.S. 385 ,106 S.Ct. 3000 ,92 L.Ed.2d 315 (1986) {per curiam), a pattern-or-practice case, when considering a discriminatory salary structure, the Court noted that although the salary discrimination began prior to the date that the act was actionable under Title VII, “[e]ach week’s paycheck that deliver[ed] less to a black than to a similarly situated white is a wrong actionable under Title VII ....’’Id., at 395,106 S.Ct. 3000 .
Applying this framework to the case before us, it is relatively easy to rule out the middle option of a continuing violation. Either one disсrete act occurred in February 1997, or a series of separate discrete acts occurred (one per paycheck), each one of which would be actionable on its own if the other prerequisites to suit were satisfied.
Reese argues that his claim is timely because each paycheck he received during the 300-day period before he filed his EEOC charge was a fresh act of discrimination within the limitations period. (Note that he wisely concedes that he cannot recover for pay periods that ended prior to
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the 300-day cutoff.) In support he relies on
Bazemore,
which this court followed in
Wagner v. NutraSweet Co.,
Cases in which the focal point of the plaintiffs complaint is a singular event or a broad program or system that affects pay, as opposed to the pay level itself, are different. Thus, the Supreme Court held in
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
In contrast, the Third Circuit had a case much like ours, in which the plaintiff-employee claimed that he fell within the
Baze-more
rule because his initial pay grade classification was set too low because of his national origin (Hispanic), and each paycheck he received thereafter continued to reflect this discrimination.
Cardenas v. Massey,
Notwithstanding these decisions, there is a line of cases decided in this court prior tо
National Railroad Passenger Corp.
that are in tension with the rule that treats each check in a simple discriminatory pay claim as a new violation, but that treats other acts affecting pay more indirectly (tenure decisions, promotions, seniority systems, pension arrangements, etc.) as single-time events with future consequences. In
Dasgupta v. Univ. of Wis. Bd. of Regents,
[i]n Bazemore and NutraSweet, the plaintiffs alleged that during the limitations period they failed to receive the amount of compensation that the law entitled them to. The fact that this level had been determined before the limitations period meant only thаt the violation of their rights was predictable. If an employer tells his employee, “I am going to infringe your rights under Title VII at least once every year you work for me,” this does not start the statute of limitations running on the future violations, violations that have not yet been committed. This case is at the opposite pole. There were no new viоlations during the limitations period, but merely a refusal to rectify the consequences of time-barred violations. It is not a violation of Title VII to tell an employee he won’t get a raise to bring him up to the salary level that he would have attained had he not been discriminated against at a time so far in the past as to be outside the period during which he could bring a suit seeking relief against that discrimination.
The Dasgupta panel ultimately concluded that the professor’s claim was untimely because he did not file a charge with the EEOC until eight years after his employer’s last allegedly discriminatory decision affecting his pay. Id. at 1140. It held that the professor’s paychecks were merely “effects within the limitations period of unlawful acts that occurred earlier.... A fingering effect of an unlawful act is not itself an unlawful act, however, so it does not revive an already time-barred illegality ....” Id. Relying on Dasgupta, the defendants argue that the continuing violation theory does not apply to Reese’s contention that each paycheck he received wаs a fresh act of discrimination, and that therefore Reese’s claim is untimely.
We understand why not only the defendants here, but parties around this circuit in general, find the current state of affairs to be confusing. It is difficult, to say the least, to distinguish between the situation in
Dasgupta
and that in
Wagner,
a case that
Dasgupta
did not purport to overrule. It is possible, of course, that the
Dasgupta
panel thought that
Wagner
did not give adequate scope to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Ricks,
and it might have been influenced by the fact that
Bazemore
was a
per curiam
opinion (albeit one that adopted in this particular instance the language found in Justice Brennan’s concurring opinion, see
In light of the fact that the Supreme Court itself is not yet ready to give up on
Bazemore,
we conclude that we are obliged to follow its rule for strict paycheck cases that do not involve allegations of discrete discriminatory acts such as failures to promote, or discriminatory plans or systems.
1
Indeed, our sense of the law here is analogous to the opinion the Second Circuit had of the law relating to a manufacturer’s right under the antitrust laws to insist unilaterally on a specific resale priсe, which in the years prior to
Business Electronics Corp. v. Sharp Electronics Corp.,
Applying this theory to Reese’s case, we conclude that his claims for pay within the 300-day period are not time-barred, because each check that ICS paid Reese was pоtentially a fresh act of discrimination. This conclusion is consistent with similar results our colleagues in numerous other circuits have reached. See
Anderson v. Zubieta,
Ill
For these reasons, we VaCate the judgment of the district court and Remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. This conclusion is consistent with that reached by another panel of this court on the identical issue, in an opinion issued contemporaneously with this one. See
Hilderbrandt v. Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources and Richard Little,
